Visitors take photos of a 2003 limited edition screenprint 'Flower Thrower' or 'Love Is In The Air' at 'The Art Of Banksy. A Visual Protest' exhibition the Mudec, the Museum of Cultures in Milan. Photo: AFP

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His identity is a mystery that adds to his allure, but a new exhibition in Italy dedicated to street artist Banksy looks beyond the feverish headlines to explore his works as vehicles for protest.

The solo show, organised by the Museum of Cultures in Milan, is “the first on Banksy organised by a public museum – apart from the one in Bristol put on by the artist, but that was a one-off performance,” said curator Gianni Mercurio.

The Italian show was organised without Banksy’s say-so and was “very difficult, it was like working with a ghost,” he added.

Banksy’s true identity has been a closely-guarded secret since the start of the 1990s. He is known to be British and comes from Bristol. He uploads photographs of his works onto his website, but never comments.

“Banksy owes a lot of his success, or rather to his popularity, to the fact that he is an anonymous artist. It’s a contradiction: his notoriety comes from his anonymity,” he said.

Mercurio said he opted for “a slightly academic approach” in putting together the exhibition, entitled The Art Of Banksy. A VisualProtest, which runs until April.

The Art Of Banksy. A Visual Protest exhibition is aimed at stimulating our critical reflection and (what may be) Banksy’s place within the more general context of the history of contemporary art. Photo: AP

”I want the public to understand who Banksy is as an artist and not just as a media phenomenon. He has become a myth and that means his art has become secondary,” he said.

The show starts by looking at the artist’s influences, from the Situationism movement to the May 1968 uprising in Paris.

It explores key works such as Love Is In The Air, a stencilled graffiti which captures a man in the act of throwing flowers instead of a Molotov cocktail in a peaceful but hard-hitting protest.

The show for the first time unites under one roof around 80 works, including paintings, sculptures and prints by the artist, as well as 60 vinyl record and CD covers he has designed.

Several works show how Banksy subverts world-famous images by changing elements in them to alter their meaning.

In Flag, he takes Pulitzer prize-winner Joe Rosenthal’s photograph of five Marines and a Navy corpsman raising the US flag and replaces them with young rebels from Harlem, who are raising it over a burnt-out car.

Banksy’s 2002 spray paint on plaster work Bomb Middle England on exhibit at Mudec, the Museum of Cultures in Milan. Photo: AFP

In Turf War, he transforms British former prime minister Winston Churchill into a Punk icon, calling it “creative vandalism”.

The exhibition also pays tribute to Banksy’s famous rats, who he transforms into rappers, violin players or artists.

Banksy’s art, at once satirical and politically engaged, denounces everything from consumerism to US imperialism or war.

In Can’t Beat The Feelin’, for example, Mickey Mouse and Ronald McDonald are superimposed onto the famous photograph of the naked girl fleeing napalm bombings in Vietnam, holding her hands as she runs.

“Banksy’s essence is the message. He is a storyteller and a realist because he uses elements and people from everyday life,” said Mercurio.

“He has revived the rebel and political side of street art which had been abandoned. Which is to his great credit”. – AFP